Pope Francis sides with victims of 300 predators and wants to root out this tragic horror

This comes after US prosecutors found that more than 1,000 children had been molested by clergy in Pennsylvania

The US Conference of Catholic Bishop is now calling for an urgent investigation led by the VaticanCardinal Daniel DiNardo, the group's president, called the scandal a failure of episcopal leadershipThe report from a Pennsylvania grand jury found that 301 priests abused children in Pennsylvania over the past 70 years

Pope Francis is on the side of victims of more than 300 predator priests in the US accused of abusing children in one state, the Vatican says. In a statement, it said the Church wanted to listen to the victims to root out this tragic horror.

This comes after US prosecutors found that more than 1,000 children had been molested by clergy in Pennsylvania.

The US Conference of Catholic Bishop is now calling for an urgent investigation led by the Vatican.

Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, the group's president, called the scandal a failure of episcopal leadership. It comes days after the largest-ever probe of Catholic sex abuse in the US.

The report from a Pennsylvania grand jury found that 301 priests abused children in the state over the past 70 years.

It also found that some abusers and those that covered up their crimes were later elevated to senior roles in the church.

Cardinal DiNardo of Texas said in a statement on Thursday - two days after the report was issued - that the church is now faced with a spiritual crisis that requires not only spiritual conversion, but practical changes to avoid repeating the sins and failures that are so evident in this recent report.

He said the executive committee of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) had outlined three goals to prevent further abuse, and punish predators in the Church and anyone who would conceal them.

The USCCB said it would expand third-party reporting mechanisms that already exist in some dioceses for victims of abuse.

It pledged to streamline the complaints process, to make it more prompt, fair, and transparent and to specify what constraints may be imposed on bishops at each stage of that process.

And the bishops called for a papal representative to investigate allegations of sexual abuse against former Washington DC Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, 88, who resigned last month.

He is alleged to have personally abused several boys, including one altar boy 47 years ago.

Pope Francis immediately accepted his resignation and ordered him to pray as he awaits a church trial to consider further punishment.